Conservators put the finishing touches on what was a major makeover for the 4,000-year-old mummy, one of only half-a-dozen in the world dating back to Egypt's Old Kingdom.
By Margie Fishman, Emory Report
The mummy from 2300 B.C. was in a sorry state when he arrived at Emory in 1921. Headless, his neck bones had tumbled into his abdominal cavity. Gaping holes and sagging linens marred vague remnants of shoulders, hips and knees. One conservator likened his physique to a crushed bag of potato chips.
Today, the oldest Egyptian mummy in North America has a new lease on the afterlife and is featured in a Michael C. Carlos Museum exhibit, thanks to a patient group of Emory conservation experts, anthropologists and doctors.
"Life and Death in the Pyramid Age: The Emory Old Kingdom Mummy" places the mummy in the context of ancient Egypt's burial rites and rituals, along with exploring the social and political changes at the end of the Pyramid Age. Approximately 120 objects from the Carlos Museum's collection and borrowed from other museums and private collectors will be on display through Dec. 11.
They include a life-size replica of an Old Kingdom tomb, "magic" vessels and wands used to recite spells on the dead, and a rare statue of Pharaoh Pepi, who ruled during the mummy's lifetime.
"This mummy is a very important piece. We've finally been able to conserve it and put it on display," says Peter Lacovara, the Carlos Museum's senior curator of ancient Egyptian, Nubian and near Eastern art.
Listen to leading Egyptologists discuss the history of the mummy and the site where it originated:
It was a long road to get the mummy ready for prime time.
Acquired by Emory theology professor William A. Shelton in 1920, the mummy was the first inventoried object in what was then the Emory University Museum of Art and Archaeology.
Dismissed as a massive reconstruction effort, the mummy was squirreled away in two crates in storage (one for his body and one for his head, that had fallen off).
At Lacovara's nudging, the mummy identified as "1921.1" was retrieved about a year ago and carefully transported to Emory University Hospital for X-ray and CT radiographic imaging.
Modern technology revealed much about the early mummification process, which used a combination of salts, oils and resin. It also permitted the conservation team to peer inside the mummy to assess the body's condition without actually unwrapping him. Exposing the body would have been disrespectful as well as damaging, notes Carlos conservator Renee Stein.
"The overarching goal of the project was to restore some structural integrity to the body and dignity to human remains," she says.
The mummy predates the period when the brain was removed during the embalming process, and the head contained a walnut-sized piece of material that appears to be the dessicated brain.
With the help of radiology professor William Torres, who has examined several Carlos mummies, the conservation team learned that the mummy's bones were well-mineralized, it hadn't suffered any major head trauma and it hadn't been prone to ear infections. Although his pelvis was obscured, the group determined that the mummy was most likely a male, given the size and shape of his skull.
All in all, "this was a pretty healthy individual," says Emory anthropologist George Armelagos, who was involved in the examination effort.
In light of the physical evidence and that the mummy had been buried at a holy site, conservators safely assumed that the mummy had access to a good diet and other social advantages. The cause of death, however, remained a mystery.
The Carlos Museum called on Mimi Leveque, a freelance conservator from Boston. Leveque has lent her expertise to several of the dozen mummies in the Carlos collection, the youngest of which is 2,000 years old.
One of the most glaring issues with the Old Kingdom mummy was his displaced head. The mummy originally was laid on his right side (a common burial position at the time), his head supported by a headrest. Over time, the headrest had been lost, along with the bulk of his coffin, leaving the head unsupported.
In the slideshow below, see images of the mummy before the makeover, and listen to Egyptologists discuss mummy science:
As a solution, Leveque relied on low-tech methods, carving out a piece of archival-quality foam and wedging it in the hollow between the mummy's collar bones and shoulder blades. She then threaded a padded dowel in the foam and through the hole at the base of the skull.
The mummy's jaw was cast from a mold from a similarly-sized, more modern jaw from Armelagos' lab. Two undergraduate interns used an epoxy putty to form missing bones for the hands and feet. They placed the bones inside padded papier-mache forms, wrapped in modern linen that was dyed to match the ancient wrappings.
Once intact, the mummy appeared lifelike, as if he had just lain down to sleep.
Eventually the mummy, one of only a half-dozen from that period who have survived, will be a permanent fixture at the Carlos. Due to his fragility, he will not tour.
Ancient Egyptians believed that by visiting tombs and actively remembering the dead through images, mummies were kept alive in the afterlife, explains Lacovara.
"In recreating the tomb and restoring the Old Kingdom mummy, we are fulfilling his wish," he says.
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